Sag Harbor Art Camp

Learning from the Masters in Music, Art, Theater

At our summer arts camp in Bridgehampton , New York, close to Sag Harbor, Southampton, Sagaponack, and East Hampton, one of the concepts that underpins all of our classes is the idea of learning from the masters. What does this look like practically?

In music, both in Rock Camp and Jazz Workshop, it means learning songs that resonates with you, transcribing solos, deconstructing the aritecture of a song, copying scores, and more. In art, both in Diving into Art and Explore Ceramics, it means copying the drawings and paintings of past masters to learn their technique and style. In our Theater Workshop program, actors may study a specific acting style of another actor to understand the nuances of that approach, then adapt those skills to create their own unique performance.

The second part of this process is to bring all of these new found techniques into your own music, art, and acting. This process develops organically. Once you have internalized your new techniques and knowledge, the next step is to paradoxically “forget what you have learned .” You often find your music, art, and acting is now in a whole new place, and your own voice is strengthened.

A Unique Summer Arts Camp Minutes from Southampton

Your home for the arts is just minutes from Southampton, Water Mill, East Hampton, Sag Harbor, Amagansett, and Sagaponack! Whether your interests are in music, art, ceramics, theater, or the culinary arts, we have a very special summer camp in Bridgehampton that happens in July for kids, teens, and adults that will inspire to another level in your artistic development. Here is our schedule for this summer. Registration is on our site or you can call/text for more info, (908) 230-6079.

See you this July!

Teamwork, The Music and Sports Connection

There are definitely many similarities between sports and music. The importance of teamwork is what first comes to mind. Musicians in Rock Camp, our music camp in Bridgehampton, New York, rehearse and learn the music together, and adjust in real time to what everyone is doing on stage.

Basketball legend, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, says it best. 

"The whole idea of teamwork for a basketball team and a jazz group is basically the same.  You have to work within a tight structure of time, space, and rules, and you have to find room for personal expression while supporting each member in time and reacting to what they do in time and space.  Jazz shows how these constrictors can be liberating rather than confining."

 Here is a short clip of the basketball legend, Kareem Abdul Jabbar talking about attending his first music concert, Duke Ellington and the jazz-like quality to his playing.  Here is another clip of him speaking at Lincoln Center.  So good!